I was rather shocked and surprised to read that Mrs Zille had told a radio station that “some judges allow themselves to be abused and I am afraid Nathan Erasmus is one of them” … Mrs Zille attacked judge Erasmus in very personal terms and accused him of being abused and used by the ANC and did this in a transparent effort to undermine the credibility of the judge and of the Commission that he chairs. This is no different from the ANC Youth League and Young Communist League diatribes and shows a scandalous disregard for our Constitution. If Mrs Zille was really a woman of principle she would, at the very least, have apologised for the comment — yet when given the chance she declined to comment further on the matter.

But yesterday a bench of judges agreed with Zille that Rasool’s motive had in fact been the “improper one” of seeking to embarrass his political opponents, in particular the Democratic Alliance (DA), which leads the city. Judges Kevin Swain and Chris Nicholson, sitting in the Cape High Court, also said the appointment of a serving judge to chair the commission is incompatible with the principle of separation of powers, and is therefore unlawful and invalid.

Luckily I did not comment on the legal validity of Zille’s argument — otherwise I would have had serious egg on my face. However, in as much as my comments might have been interpreted as suggesting she does not have a case, I definitely owe her an apology. The Court, presented with all the facts, found that this Commission was set up with a political motive and thus that Rasool had tried to abuse the judiciary for short-term political gain.

I have not had sight of the full judgment yet, so I cannot make an informed comment on the correctness of these findings. But it clearly is a serious slap in the face of Rasool and a vindication of Zille.

But I still feel that it was inappropriate of Zille to criticise Erasmus for agreeing to chair this Commission and that the way she criticised him in a very personal way undermined respect for the judiciary. The Constitutional Court has made it clear that it is not always inappropriate for a judge to sit as a head of a commission of inquiry and without all the facts presented to the Court, it would have been difficult for Erasmus to make a call.

What the judgment seems to suggest is that judges should be very careful before accepting such a position and when in doubt they should decline an offer of heading a Commission of Enquiry. Erasmus might therefore have erred in this regard by not being extra careful.

This might have been a mistake. But I would contend it was also a mistake of Zille not to wait for the Court to make a decision on this matter before suggesting that Erasmus was somehow an ANC lackey. In the context of subsequent events — what with Gwede Matashe calling the Constitutional Court judges counter-revolutionaries and kortbroek Malema making all kinds of threats — one should be reminded that criticising judges is a difficult thing and that one should do it in a responsible way. I am not sure whether Zillle’s criticism of Erasmus was as responsible as it could have been.

Even where a judge makes a mistake in accepting to chair a commission of inquiry, it is for a Court to decide whether accepting such a position is compatible with the Constitution.

It is not for a politician to cast aspersions on the personal motivations of a judge where he or she is seemingly legally appointed to head a Commission of Inquiry. This kind of personal criticism undermines respect for judges and for the judiciary. Judges are not prevented from heading Commissions of Inquiry and if they are asked to head such a commission they might err in accepting such a position but this does not mean they are political lackeys of a particular politician or party.

So, Helen Zille, apologies for suggesting you have something to hide. You have been vindicated on that score. But please, Helen, for the sake of our democracy, next time think before you personally criticise the motives of a judge even before a court has made any finding on the appropriateness of such a judge sitting as the head of a Commission of Inquiry.

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Professor Pierre de Vos teaches constitutional law at the University of Western Cape. His writing has been published widely in both scholarly journals and in the popular press on a wide range of topics, including gay rights, the right to equality, social and economic rights, and affirmative action. Since October 2006 he also publishes a blog, Constitutionally Speaking.